God’s challenge

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April 23, 2018

In this morning’s Fruit of the Vine, Vivian Thornburg remembers her conversion experience that “took place about ninety years ago, and I’ve been journeying with Jesus ever since.” Vivian writes that, in spite of all these years as a Christian, it has been only recently that she “realized that I didn’t really know God like I thought I did.” Vivian had an experience in 2006, “when the voice of God’s Spirit said to me, ‘You have an unforgiving spirit.’”

This, I think, is the mark of spiritual maturity – an ability to hear God’s voice, especially when that voice challenges our assumptions about who we are or what we’ve accomplished. Especially when God’s challenge shocks us. 

Vivian was shocked. “I had never considered my actions through my life as unforgiving. But God opened my eyes to things I had carried around for years – even against some of the dearest people I knew. I realized that unforgiveness had affected my attitudes and actions toward people in ways I never realized, and my heart was shattered with grief for how long I had been influenced by an unforgiving heart.”

I believe the difference between spiritual maturity and spiritual immaturity isn’t whether what we do is good or bad. Instead, when challenged, spiritually immature people double down. Spiritually mature people, on the other hand, are both troubled to see the truth of what they’ve done and relieved to finally know the truth and to be able to do something about it.

Vivian says that though she was “broken-hearted, I prayed for God’s mercy and forgiveness, and ... God’s presence settled on me and filled me with a sense of peace.... But my point is not about forgiveness – only that through God’s convicting word to me, I was drawn into a deeper knowledge of God ... and a stronger sense of God’s invitation.” She continues, “God’s correction offers a chance to know him in ways you hadn’t before. How might you seek to know God’s loving heart more fully when you are corrected?”

Each day’s devotional in Fruit of the Vine is designed to offer an experience akin to traditional Quaker worship, where – out of the silence – someone stands and shares a message that Jesus has given for the larger gathering of worshipers to hear, to contemplate, and to incorporate into their lives together. And I wonder if God has been speaking or might be speaking to you some message that might benefit the larger family of Friends. If you think this might be the case, we’d like to hear from you. Click here for our writer’s guidelines

Eric Muhr


P.S. In this tenuous year of transition, Barclay Press must raise $25,000 in order to remain a going concern. So far this year, we’ve received $16,255 in donations and $3,600 in pledges, getting us nearly 80 percent of the way to where we need to be by the end of the year. Thank you for your continuing prayer, for your words of encouragement, and for your support.





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

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Quakers on Genesis

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April 16, 2018

The way Friends interacted with, thought about, and used Scripture over the years frequently challenges our contemporary sensibilities about what the Bible is and what it does. I think this challenge can be healthy in that it prompts us (if we let it) to think about how we read the Bible and what we do with it – to uncover our assumptions about the text, to help us more honestly engage the text. This is why we’ve designed Illuminate Bible study curriculum, starting this fall, to include a Quaker quotation that relates to the Scripture passage each week. Here are a few of the quotations we’re including for the study of Genesis that starts in September:

“The Lord God of the whole earth, who lives forever, even the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob; whose throne is established in righteousness, who rides on the heavens and shines forth in his eternal excellence from the firmament of his power, is manifesting himself as in the days of old, and is revealing his righteousness as in the years past; and is pouring out his Spirit on his sons and daughters, according to his promise; and of the blessing of the everlasting hills.” – Francis Howgill (1618–1669)

“Towards the latter part of the women’s meeting, I found it right to revive the language of Esau, which had been uppermost with me nearly ever since taking my seat in the meeting — ‘Bless me, even me, oh, my Father!’ I told them that I had feared, and greatly feared, that there were those present whose situation resembled Esau’s, who were crying out for the blessing, but who had not regarded their birthright; but when that nature which was appointed to die, was in great distress and hunger; they had for something to satisfy this, sold their birthright, and were now charging their leanness and distress to others who were not the cause thereof. That it would be well for such to recur, and return to first principles, lest the day come when this would be the language of their hearts — ‘The harvest is passed, the summer is ended and we are not saved.’” - Ann Branson (1808–1891)

“Joseph was a son, though no more of a son than Benjamin, but his path to the kingdom lay through the pit and the prison, with only gleams of sunlight between. His sufferings are remarkably typical of the sufferings of Christ, and largely so of His followers.” - David B. Updegraff (1830–1894)

“Did not the jailer there in Egypt, to whom Joseph was committed as a prisoner; did he not see that God was with Joseph, and how that God prospered whatever he did; and was not his sight beyond all you priests, that say you have not known God, unless scripture had declared it to you. And so are you not as dark as all your fellow-high priests, that could not see Christ when he was come, but persecuted him? And what scripture had the jailer, or what rule to see by, that God was with Joseph, and how God had prospered whatever he did? Was not this something of the divine light, both in Joseph and in the jailer, which is testified by scripture?” - George Fox (1624–1691)

“And in vision, there opened before me the appearance of a bright rainbow that extended from one side of the horizon to the other, through the zenith from the northwest to the southeast, and in a seeming soft language, it revived on my mind, this is the token of the covenant that God made with his people, that he would not again destroy the world with a flood. Great Babylon was now brought into remembrance before God and her cup was full and her fall was near at hand, and that the Lord is now arising and will give her, her due.” – Elias Hicks (1748–1830)

Eric Muhr


P.S. In this tenuous year of transition, Barclay Press must raise $25,000 in order to remain a going concern. So far this year, we’ve received $16,230 in donations and $3,600 in pledges, getting us 79 percent of the way to where we need to be by the end of the year. Thank you for your continuing prayer, for your words of encouragement, and for your support.





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

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Copyright © 2018 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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Good neighbors

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April 9, 2018

In this morning’s Fruit of the Vine, Scott Wagoner reflects on a neighbor he once had “who owned just about every tool that ever existed.” During the seven years that they lived next to each other, Scott learned to check with his neighbor any time he needed a tool, because whatever it was, “It was likely he had one, and I was welcome to use it.” 

This is an important part of being a good neighbor – generosity. Scott writes that his neighbor’s “generosity of time and tools was one of the blessings of living beside him and his wife. He epitomized Proverbs 3:28 . . . . I was never told to come back the next day; his generosity was immediate and genuine. If it was within his power to help me, he never withheld.”

Have you considered how frequently the power to give or to withhold is under your control? I started to think back over my interactions yesterday. A friend brought me doughnuts. Another friend, during a phone conversation, asked about my parents. Someone dropped off a book they’d recommended earlier in the week. These are little things. All the ways we move toward or away from one another, all the ways we are present or distant, open-handed or closed off – they add up.

Scott notes that the book of “Proverbs invites us to consider living a life of generosity and to be good stewards of the power we possess. We may possess skills or resources that will benefit others around us. Do I offer them freely or do I withhold?”

Scott leaves us with this question as a challenge: “To whom can you offer goodness today?”

Scott also offers this prayer: “Lord, grant us generous hearts so that we may not withhold your goodness.”

Eric Muhr


P.S. In this tenuous year of transition, Barclay Press must raise $25,000 in order to remain a going concern. So far this year, we’ve received $15,795 in donations and $3,600 in pledges, getting us 77 percent of the way to where we need to be by the end of the year. Thank you for your continuing prayer, for your words of encouragement, and for your support.





 
BARCLAY
PRESS

211 N. Meridian St. #101
Newberg, OR 97132
503.538.9775


www.barclaypress.com

Share Stories
Change Lives
Copyright © 2018 Barclay Press, All rights reserved.


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